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Podcast
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Modern political philosophy has argued that justice
requires full equality for those who can both carry the burdens and get the
benefits from participating in social cooperation. But what about those who
cannot fulfill these obligations because of limited mental capacities? Are
these people still due justice, and if so, what sort of equality could we expect
to grant them? In other words, what do we owe to those among us who are not
capable of participating in society in typical ways because of their cognitive
limitations? These and other questions will focus the discussion with Eva Kittay,
author of the highly influential book
Love's Labor:
Essays on Women, Equality, and Dependency. Does justice presuppose
participation, and what happens when we shift the obligation from duty to caring
for others? This discussion will get to the core of what we believe we owe
others and what it means to live in a society where difference means more than
just religious, ethnic, or political difference. It goes to the heart of what it
means to be human in society.
Eva Feder Kittay is a Professor of
Philosophy at State University of New York, Stony Brook. She has authored and
edited numerous books on a range of topics, with an emphasis on feminism,
political thought, and disability studies. She is a Senior Fellow at the Center
for Medical Humanities, Compassionate Care, and Bioethics at Stony Brook. Her
forthcoming book
Cognitive Disability and Its Challenge to Moral Philosophy continues many of
the themes of her earlier work including emphasizing the way in which
traditional philosophy have passed over the concerns of a large spectrum of
humanity.
WHY?'s host Jack Russell Weinstein
remarks, "Having Eva Kittay on the show is tremendously exciting. Reading
Love's Labor changed my own work forever and forced me to look at the world
-- and at justice -- in an entirely different way. This is a discussion that
will tear at your heart while challenging you intellectually."
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